Java Nostalgia: Remembrances Before the ‘Coffee Culture’ Boom

It’s early morning 1982 and you’re visiting your neighbors, and they offer you a cup of coffee.  You know exactly what you’re going to get – it’s going to be a watery mug of Maxwell House or Folgers. End of story.

It’s early morning 1982 and you’re visiting your neighbors, and they offer you a cup of coffee.  You know exactly what you’re going to get – it’s going to be a watery mug of Maxwell House or Folgers. End of story.  Fast forward a few decades and the simple cup of coffee has gotten complicated.

Now, we have the pods offering us a tapestry of tastes (none of them that good), gourmet brands, and a variety of coffee makers.  At the coffee shop it’s even more complex, with a scroll of options.

“I’ll have a venti, half-whole milk, one quarter 1%, one quarter non-fat, extra hot, split quad shots (1 1/2 shots decaf, 2 1/2 shots regular), no foam latte, with whip, 2 packets of Splenda, 1 sugar in the raw, a touch of vanilla syrup and 3 short sprinkles of cinnamon.”

Having greater choice in coffee is probably a good thing, but it definitely hasn’t simplified things – and these little complexities accumulate in the modern life.   Let’s take a look at coffee from mid-century through the eighties – before the “coffee culture” took over the market.  We’ll look at the different options, brands and advertising used in those days.  We’ll start with the most basic option: “decaf or regular”…

DECAFFEINATED COFFEE

Woman’s Day magazine – October 23, 1978

Sanka was the O.G. of decaffeinated coffee.  It was started in Germany at the start of the twentieth century under the name Kaffee Handels-Aktien-Gesellschaft.  In France, it took the name Sanka – derived from “sans caféine” (“without caffeine”).  It didn’t really take off in the US until it hitched its wagon to a few hugely popular TV shows.  Sanka became sponsors of “I Love Lucy”, “The Twilight Zone” and “The Andy Griffith Show” – the bright orange can was now a part of American culture.

Sanka found its way into memorable pop culture moments as well:

The 1941 Laurel and Hardy film Great Guns features a scene where Stan Laurel is handed a cup of coffee. He asks “Sanka?”, and the mess attendant replies, “You’re welcome!”  Forty-one years later in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Mr. Vargas declares, “Look, I’m a little slow today. I just switched to Sanka, so have a heart.”

I don’t know what a “decaffeinated person” is, and I’m not sure I want to find out.  One thing that has changed from decades past is that coffee has become almost exclusively a morning “jolt”; whereas, a coffee after dinner used to be fairly commonplace.  Many took decaf after dinner – and regular coffee was often just weaker and thereby less likely to keep you up at night.

COFFEE MAKERS

Of course, things were different in Europe.  This article is from the perspective of the U.S., where “abnormal” coffee just wasn’t our thing until the late nineties.  If your neighbor whipped out a French Press or something like that coffeepot above, it would be the shock of the century.  No, it was strictly Maxwell House or Foldger’s dripped in a boring Mr. Coffee coffeemaker.

As this ad from 1972 illustrates, not everyone used the dull coffeepot with the same old cheap coffee; it was the seventies after all, where traditions were being thrown aside and people were choosing to “express themselves”.  But it was the exception not the rule.

Readers Digest – May 1979

Would you believe you couldn’t put your coffee on a timer until the end of the 1970s?  The affordable timed coffeemaker didn’t make its way into American kitchens until 1979.

The Melitta Bentz Company patented the filter bag in 1937 and also vacuum packing in 1962. Indeed, the history of coffee in the twentieth century is basically the story of making coffee quicker.  Of course, we have pods now which take much of the labor out (minus cleaning), but there have been numerous steps along the way, in humanity’s desperate quest to make a quick a cup of coffee.   Perhaps most notably in this March of Progress is so-called “instant coffee”….

INSTANT COFFEE

This General Foods International Coffee ad presents us with a variety of options including “Orange Cappuccino”.  It’s gross, but at least they were trying to branch out.    The main problem here is that it’s instant coffee – coffee that’s been freeze or spray dried.  For some, the taste is intolerable (but those drinking from pods don’t have room to critique).

This General Foods International Coffee from 1983 features Lea Thompson – just a couple years away from Back to the Future.

Australian Women’s Weekly – December 4, 1968

General Foods International Coffee wasn’t the first to make instant coffee – it had been around for a while. Nescafé had been putting out their instant grounds since 1938.  In the 1980’s the Nescafé brand was largely replaced by their new branding “Tasters Choice”.  Anyone who remembers TV in the eighties can hardly forget the endless commercials for their new “sophisticated” instant coffee.

Chase & Sanborn had been putting out coffee grounds for nearly a hundred years before unleashing their instant variety.  Chase & Sanborn were the folks responsible for perhaps the most notorious coffee ad of all time:

The most well-known instant coffee commercial has to be Folgers Crystals.  They claimed to be filmed via “hidden camera” where they recorded reactions from customers at high-end restaurants when they learn their normal coffee has been replaced by this crappy instant coffee…

Folgers began as the Pioneer Steam Coffee Company during the gold rush – offering the San Francisco area an alternative to having to start with green coffee beans. The carpenter hired to build the coffee mill was the humble James A. Folger.  After working a number a years, he saved enough to buy a share of the company – and by 1872, he owned the whole damned thing and was on his way to building not mills, but a coffee empire!

We can’t discuss Folgers and not bring up their competitor – perhaps the biggest coffee name of them all…

MAXWELL HOUSE

November 1952

Maxwell House got its name from the quaint little hotel diner in Tennessee where the coffee was first served in 1892.  It was a huge success; the former grocer, Joel Cheek, soon found his product to be the country’s largest coffee manufacturer.  In 1915, they adopted the slogan “Good to the last drop”.  They claimed the saying originated from President Teddy Roosevelt, but the legitimacy of that claim is a bit suspect.

Naturally, Maxwell House ads were everywhere.  In 1978 they used Margaret Hamilton (The Wicked Witch in ‘The Wizard of Oz’).

We could go on forever reminiscing about the “olden days” of coffee and making comparisons to today where there is a Starbucks on every corner, and a hipster pretending to be a coffee expert in every café; but, we’ll take a much-needed coffee break until next time.  Cheers.

Would you like to support Flashbak?

Please consider making a donation to our site. We don't want to rely on ads to bring you the best of visual culture. You can also support us by signing up to our Mailing List. And you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. For great art and culture delivered to your door, visit our shop.